Results 171 to 180 of about 2,878 (218)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Semitic Languages in Contact

2015
A Thamudic B Abecedary in the South Semitic Letter Order Ahmad Al-Jallad and Ali Al-Manaser Ethiopian Semitic and Cushitic. Ancient Contact Features in Ge'ez and Amharic David Appleyard Hebrew Adverbialization, Aramaic Language Contact, and mpny 'sr in Exodus 19:18 Samuel Boyd and Humphrey Hardy The Distribution of Declined Participles in Aramaic ...
exaly   +2 more sources

TheVerb in Semitic Languages / Brueckelman's Philology of the Semitic Languages as Example

JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES, 2023
Arabic is the language of the Holy Quran, a branch of a group of languages known to Orientalists as Semitic languages, and Orientalists have spent considerable efforts to study these languages, and wrote many books and researches about. The Semites are the languages that the orientalist Schulzer called the Hebrew, Abyssinian and Syriac languages ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Subgrouping of the Semitic Languages

Language and Linguistics Compass, 2007
Abstract The Semitic languages have enjoyed a long tradition of linguistic study, and remain one of the most widely studied of the world's language families. The large amount of scholarship that is generated on both the ancient and modern languages continues to have an effect on our understanding of the internal subgrouping of the ...
openaire   +1 more source

Semites and Semitism: From Philology to the Language of Myth

Philological Encounters, 2017
This contribution analyses the transition from the “Semites”, which were derived, in early Semitic philology, from linguistic classification, to “Semitism,” a category combining linguistics, psychology, and cultural history. Goldziher’s critique of Renan’s understanding of Semitism not only led to a new logic of peoples in an economy of invention ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Semitic Languages

2019
Mandaic (in the form generally described as 'Neo-Mandaic' or 'Modern Mandaic'; ISO/DIS 639–3: mid) is the language of the Mandæan community, which was formerly based in Iraq and Iran (Map 26.1) but is today distributed throughout the world, principally in Europe, Australia and North America, as the result of ethnic cleansing in its homeland.
openaire   +2 more sources

Language Resources for Semitic Languages

2009
Language resources are crucial for research and development in theoretical, computational, socio- and psycho-linguistics, and for the construction of natural language processing applications. This paper focuses on Semitic languages, a language family that includes Arabic and Hebrew and has over 300 million speakers.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy